PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Yahaira Montanez had been dating gang member and murder suspect Henry Lopez about a month before a deadly shooting in October 2014.

That day, Lopez and two other Young Niggas In Charge, or YNIC, street gang members —Bruce Moten and Tevin Briggs — came to her Tappan Street apartment and asked her to park Lopez's black Infinti behind a house on Alaska Street, Montanez said.

"He just told me to make sure you put the windows down," Montanez said of Lopez. Hours later, she would see the black Infinti on the news as being linked to a murder at the Chad Brown housing complex that morning. "I panicked. I didn't know what to do," Montanez said.

Clearly nervous and at times near tears, Montanez testified Friday in the murder trial of YNIC members Moten, 27, and Antonio "Tone" Fortes, 26. Moten, Fortes, Lopez and Tevin Briggs are accused of murdering Chad Brown gang member Terry Robinson, 22, and shooting Delacey Andrade on Oct. 22, 2014, as part of an ongoing feud.

Authorities say Fortes made the call alerting Lopez, Briggs and Moten of their rivals' whereabouts and that it was Briggs and Moten who did the shooting that left Robinson dead and Andrade with a bullet in his backside. Lopez, the driver, testified earlier this week as a cooperating witness.

Montanez recalled Moten asking her for a garbage bag the day of the shooting. She saw a gun on the bathroom counter as Moten shoved his black hooded sweatshirt into the bag. She asked Lopez what was going on.

"He told me as long as I listened to [Moten], [Moten would] leave me alone," Montanez said. "I told him I didn't want guns in the house. He told me not to worry about it."

Lopez, an admitted drug dealer and repeat felon, eventually told her about the day's events. "He said they ran out of the car with guns," she said under questioning by Assistant Attorney General John Moreira. "They told him to go, go, go, that they'd shot somebody."

Weeks later, Lopez fled to Puerto Rico. "I was very scared. I was nervous. I felt used," said Montanez, who crossed her arms and looked up at the ceiling for much of her testimony. She nearly wept as she identified Moten and Fortes.

Montanez acknowledged being charged with obstruction after lying to police about the incident.

Moten invited her out to the Olive Garden a few months later and gave her an "outfit" from Victoria Secret. She recalled him showing her scars on his stomach and saying, "'It was either us or them'" and "'That snitch has got stitches.'"

Manosh questioned her about whether Providence police Detective Sgt. Christopher Currier helped her regain custody of her two children. "No, they never helped me get back with the kids," she said. "I did that."